Jewel Cave National Monument
Preservation
Centennial Initiative 2016
Centennial Vision
On August 25, 2006- the 90th anniversary of the National Park Service - Secretary of the Interior Dirk Kempthorne launched the National Park Centennial Initiative to prepare national parks for another century of conservation, preservation and enjoyment. Since then the National Park Service asked citizens, park partners, experts and other stakeholders what they envisioned for a second century of national parks.
A nationwide series of more than 40 listening sessions produced more than 6,000 comments that helped to shape five centennial goals. The goals and vision were presented to President Bush and to the American people on May 31st in a report called The Future of America's National Parks.
Every national park staff took their lead from this report and created local centennial strategies to describe their vision and desired accomplishments by 2016. This is just the first year, and there are many great things to come as the National Park Service prepares to celebrate 100 years!
To keep up with the Centennial Initiative and to experience the interactive version of The Future of America's National Parks and special features please visit the centennial website at www.nps.gov/2016.
Support Your Park
Volunteer
About the VIP Program at Jewel Cave National Monument
Interpretive Volunteer duties include researching, preparing and presenting thematic cave tours and a variety of surface programs including tours and programs for educational groups; staffing visitor center information desk including tour ticket sales and book sales; offering orientation and information services in informal settings; answering public information requests; and assisting with special projects. Jewel Cave National Monument also offers an internship in cave resource management. This volunteer position is designed to provide assistance to the cave management program, and also to give the intern relevant training and experience.
For more information regarding Jewel Cave National Monument volunteer program, please contact the Park Volunteer Coordinator at (605) 673-2288.
Cave Surveying
Preparing for a cave survey trip:
Before a survey team enters the cave, some preliminary steps need to be taken. A surface contact needs to be chosen, who knows when the group plans to return from the cave and where they plan to go. Survey gear needs to be checked and carefully packed for the trip. This equipment includes a laser distance meter or measuring tape, compass, clinometer, a camera, and books for recording survey and inventory data. Detailed maps of the group's travel route and destination need to be photocopied and taken into the cave. If the group will be staying underground for several days, additional gear is needed for cooking and sleeping.
Navigating through the cave:
Once the group enters the cave, a great deal of time is spent traveling to the area to be surveyed. Usually this travel is along a âflaggedâ route, which is marked with plastic surveyorâs tape. The tape is color-coded for different routes. Small pieces of tape are visible on rocks along the trail, pointing the way. Turns are marked by bending the flagging tape to make an âLâ shape. One end of each piece of tape is cut into a point: this arrow always points to the quickest way out of the cave.
Only main routes through the cave are flagged. Therefore, every survey trip will involve traveling away from a flagged route. The cave maps are used to travel between flagged routes and the teamâs destination. Maps show the location of cave survey stations, passage walls, and features such as pits, ledges, and large rocks. When entering unmapped territory, the group surveys passages as they go, placing new survey stations that they can follow on the way back.
Exploring and mapping leads:
Cave maps show the location of âleads,â or unexplored passages. Sometimes a team will enter a lead and find that it ends after only a few feet. Sometimes a lead will go on for miles and reveal several new leads. The team surveys leads until they end, or until it is time to head back to the surface.
In order to add these new discoveries to the cave map, the team begins their survey at the nearest pre-existing station and surveys into the lead.
Survey stations are specific points in the cave. Each station has a unique name, which is a combination of letters and numbers. An example of a station name is XC25.
One member of the survey team creates a new station, making sure that there is a straight line-of-sight between it and the previous station. The team then measures the distance between the two stations, using a fiberglass measuring tape or laser meter.
Another person is positioned at the previous station and reads the compass and clinometer while looking toward the new station. A light is held on the new station and pointed back at the instrument reader. This enables the reader to line up the light with the numbers on the instruments and obtain an accurate reading. The compass, read in degrees from 0 to 360, gives the compass bearing, or azimuth. The clinometer, read in degrees from â90 to +90, gives the inclination (or vertical angle) between the two stations.
All survey data (distances, compass bearings, and vertical angles) are recorded in a book by another team member, the "sketcher." The sketcher also records estimated passage dimensions at each station. The dimensions are the distances to passage walls up, down, left, and right of the station. The data is recorded on the left-hand page of the survey book. On the right-hand page, which is gridded, the sketcher draws lines representing the survey shots. A north arrow (usually pointing up) and scale are always drawn on this page. Around the lines, the sketcher draws the passage walls to scale, making sure to include leads and major passage features.
A detailed inventory of cave formations, wet areas, geological and biological features are recorded in a separate book. All of the features found near a particular station are listed next to the station name in the inventory book.
After the trip:
Once the group comes out of the cave, the survey data is entered into special cave mapping software. The software adds up the lengths of all of the survey lines in the cave and gives the official surveyed length of the cave.
The software generates a âline plotâ of the cave, which shows the survey lines that connect each pair of survey stations. Using the sketch that was made in the cave, the passage walls and features are drawn by hand around the computer-generated line plot. These new maps are then connected to the "master map" of the entire cave.
Inventory data is also entered into the computer. This information can be used to generate maps of the cave highlighting areas where water is found or where a certain unusual feature can be seen.
Jewel Cave In Depth
- Jewel Cave National Monument
- Activities & Programs
- Animals
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Geology
- History
- In A Nutshell
- Just For Kids
- Natural World
- Park Regulations & Safety
- Planning Your Visit
- Plants
- Preservation
- Things To Do
- Visitor Services
- Walking & Hiking
- Who's Who at the Park
- Jewel Cave Map
- Jewel Cave Photos
- Recent Jewel Cave News
News from the Parks
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For students of astronomy, Sunday and Monday night is the equivalent of a World Cup Final, a new Mac operating system, and a Zeppelin reunion show all rolled into one. That’s because, as Horizons guest blogger Pete Spotts noted in his post Sunday, Jupiter, Venus, and the moon will gather to direct a lopsided frown at North America, an arrangement that won’t happen again for another 44 years.
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December 2, 2008 - 12:56pm
People from across the country gathered in Golden Gate Park's National AIDS Memorial Grove Monday to observe the 20th annual World AIDS Day.
December 2, 2008 - 12:37pm
Remember when Arizona Sen. John McCain criticized spending millions of taxpayer dollars to fund the DNA of grizzly bears in Montana during one of the presidential debates? “That’s us,” said David Restivo, a Roberts Wesleyan College alumnus and visual information specialist at Glacier National Park in Montana.
December 2, 2008 - 12:35pm
As the Great Smoky Mountains National Park prepares to celebrate its 75th year, students of history and geology are pondering questions that go back much farther than the park's creation in the 1930s. The most fascinating queries to them concern the actual formation of the mountains, their age and topography.
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